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The Year of the Cogen Appliance? Well, maybe not, but it's
interesting that three similarly conceived products for combined
heating and power (CHP) are being introduced to the US at
once, all of them aiming at slices of a potential market for
home- and small-business energy.
Onethe 5.7 kW Aisin 60 from Japanis being fine-tuned
by ECO Technology Solutions LLC, of Leesburg, VA, for domestic
use (see profile Distributed Energy May/June 2005).
Now come two more optionssimilarly small in size but
mighty in potential usabilityfrom PowerPlus Technologies
GmbH of Gera, Germany. The first measures just 54 inches long
by 30 inches deep and 43 inches high, or about the same total
volume as a clothes washer. Fueled by either natural gas or
propane, the "ecopower" unit (note the lowercase e) can be
variably controlled with a patented, automated modulator which
allows precise load-following from 2 kW to 4.7 kW. It's designed
for grid connection, so it could easily serve as a peak-shaver
for many commercial applications. By capturing the engine's
exhaust to make hot water (running through two independently
regulated circuits), its rated fuel efficiency tops an unheard
of 92%.
Single- and multi-family homes, schools, daycare centers,
hotels, motels, agricultural processing stations, car washes,
and health clubs are among the applications envisioned. All
can rely on standard grid power as their primary electricity
source; then, whenever they fire up the fuel for some hot
water, the ecopower system would deliver plenty, while also
outputting a couple of thousand watts of electricity an hour.
The resulting power could either go into immediate use or
be sold back to the grid (in states allowing net metering)
or, if appropriate (and with some additional hardware), into
battery storage.
Also arriving in the US from PowerPlus is the ecopower's
slightly larger grid-independent version. It's designed primarily
for commercial applications needing stand-alone standby powere.g.,
telecom sites, remote facilities, and agricultural stations.
Measuring 40 inches by 80 inches by 90 inches, and packed
in a steel cabinet for outdoors, the Powerhouse generates
4.2 kW; a second engine can readily be added, doubling this
to 8.4 kW. With this second engine, the system can also support
a bundled 2.5-ton air conditioning system.
Successful Debut on the Continent
Ecopower units have been marketed in Europe (for which they
were expressly designed) going on five years now, notes Mike
Cocking, sales and marketing manager for Marathon Engine Systems
of East Troy, WI. Over that time they've become something
of a "hot item." As of last year, no fewer than 700 units
had been sold cumulatively, and current sales are going at
a clip of 50 to 80 ecopower units a month.
Cocking knows the ecopower sales numbers first-hand because
Marathon makes the specially designed, extraordinarily durable
single-cylinder engine that goes into it. The quiet, low-maintenance
Marathon 5K is thus exported to PowerPlus for packaging with
Europeanized electronics and cabinetry, then retailed. Marathon
claims the engine has a 40,000-hour lifeeffectively,
that's ten years of operation, assuming 4,000 normal-duty
cycle hours out of the 8,760 hours in a year. "We've had engines
going that long" without breakdown or overhaul, he says, "and
some, even longer."
Marathon obtained the patent and manufacturing rights from
the Gas Research Institute, which spent more than $75 million
in development costs, designing the engine for continuous-operation
heat pumps running on natural gas or propane.
Its touted maintenance interval is 4,000 hours (i.e., only
once a year) and consists of an oil change, spark plug, air
filter, ignition cable, and emission adjustment costing "a
total of about 150 bucks," says Cocking. After 10 years of
service the engine can be replaced with a new one by contacting
Marathon's dealership network (www.marathonengine.com).
Design-wiseand perhaps surprisinglythe Euro-styled
cogen model was built by PowerPlus GmbH essentially as "a
glorified water-heater," i.e., not for electricity primarily.
This is just the reverse of priorities here. Cocking explains
that in Europe, building codes now mandate frequent boiler
replacement; PowerPlus thus saw this as an opportunity to
provide homeowners much greater value when they upgrade, by
offering a heater that would give power as a sort of "bonus
feature." Europeans enjoy a stable grid and don't routinely
need backup power, but Euro laws and policies strongly encourage
cogeneration. Europe has "true net metering," Cocking notes,
meaning that an in-home DG resource may sell electricity back
to the grid for the same rate as the purchase cost. Hence,
whenever the "glorified water-heater" from ecopower switches
on, the owner's electric meter might spin in reverse, and
the savings can mount up to lots of euros. One owner in Remsheid,
Germany, who favors lots of hot water, reportedly spends nothing
for electricity, but gets a check from her local utility for
the equivalent of $130 or so every monthall thanks to
Germany's liberal net-metering. Euro governments also typically
offer molto bello rebates to underwrite upfront cost-efficiency
upgrades. All things considered, then, payback on an ecopower
will arrive in just three or four years, after which the customer
actually owns a little onsite generating asset.
Ecopower and Powerhouse for the US
Conditions certainly differ, though. For one thing, net metering
typically pays back rather "grudgingly," according to Cocking.
Even so, he anticipates strong market appeal for both the
ecopower and Powerhouse. Marathon Engine is now importing
and adapting them for domestic sale, and several pilot applications
are underway. Full commercial availability is also phasing
in.
Critical to winning customers here will be (naturally) the
payback prospect. An ecopower retails for $12,500 and, although
it's very easy to install, the associated costs for that and
for grid connection will likely add another $2,000. Lifetime
maintenance can be budgeted in current dollars at $1,500.
Total outlay, about $16,000.
Over a 10-year life, then, an owner needs to make back about
$150 every month, on average, on utility billings (i.e., on
360 hours of operation). That's $0.42 needed per hour. Because
output wattage can be modulated, and other variables come
into play, it's hard to pinpoint the precise cost-per-kilowatt,
but, assuming 2.5-kW output, the per-kilowatt cost would come
to $0.16.
Although that's rather high for many residential customers,
the value proposition begins to look much better when compared
with peak energy rates and commercial rates in many areas.
The preceding doesn't factor in fuel cost because it is assumed
this would be roughly equivalent in any casebeing needed
for domestic heating and hot water. In fact, as Cocking points
out, the ecopower's very high fuel-efficiency actually improves
upon that of most in-service boilers, thus bringing the net
cost of the CHP benefit down to a range, he says, "somewhere
between twelve and fifteen cents per kilowatt for this unit."
As for the off-grid Powerhouse device, this can also be used
for cogen. However, it includes a built-in battery pack and
inverter, making it better suited for "true remote" applications,
Cocking notes. Marathon Engine Systems designed this dual-fuelable
generator with cell towers in mind, as well as other remote
or unattended and automated operations needing the higher
power range. As of early 2005, Marathon had made and sold
26 of these for service in the UK. A US adaptation is currently
under development, as is (further down the road)an off-grid,
independent version of the ecopower.
Combined-Energy-Resource Possibilities
Enhancing the value and versatility even more will be a Powerhouse
fitted with solar PV collectors or wind turbines. For remote
applications, this will effectively achieve the best of both
worldsnamely, highly desirable renewable energy paired
with highly reliable backup from a fueled source. Better still,
both will share one battery, rectifier, inverter, and remote
control setup for added economizing. Solar PV energy would
then be the primary supply, but then, on overcast days or
when the batteries are low, the ecopower generator would come
on. (For more on this tandem arrangement, see case study later
in this article.)
At the Powerhouse cabinet's current size, attached rooftop
PV could yield about .4 kW; more panels could easily be added
as needed.
Also for the US versions of these products, Marathon plans
to integrate an appropriate cooling system, especially to
please customers in the sunbeltwho, Cocking notes, will
discover that the ecopower's heat output is already perfectly
suited for year-round heating of swimming pools and hot tubs,
and powering of the pumps "for a rather low cost."
Still another adaptation and value can be realized by chaining
multiple units in series at one site. There's a build-in synergy
to be gained by sharing common controls and hookups. One application
now being piloted in a cold-weather environment is using two
ecopower systems for zoned heating in one large home. Cocking
explains, "One [ecopower system] will be in control of the
other."
For that matter, the advent of scalable CHP on a micro level
presents unusual opportunities for dedicating individualized
power units within multi-family housing, to service rural
cabins and lodges, or for remote industrial parks needing
autonomously controlled heat and power.
Configuration and packaging of ecopower units could also
be customized for the local region and conditions. For example,
a new housing subdivision constructed in the sunny Southwest
could easily do away with grid power altogether by using a
combination of rooftop solar PV (as is now being envisioned,
for example, in California's "Million Solar Roofs" legislative
initiative announced in early 2005) and basement or backyard
ecopower generators.
In any case, with or without a grid interconnection, the
ecopower comes with built-in controls for integrating with
other energy resources in combination, including the grid
as the master, and the onsite in-home system as slave. The
latter " sees the grid," says Cocking, "and marries up to
it, running in synch."
Case Study in Rural Wisconsin: Rustic, Single-Family, Multi-Energized
Micro-CHP
In 2003, engineer John Coffin was planning his new home to
be built in the scenic countryside surrounding Madison, WI.
Long fascinated with do-it-yourself power and cogeneration,
he wanted a home that could be self-sustaining, he says, "largely
if not entirely off the grid," with solar or wind energy.
Besides which, as he later discovered, a utility line extension
would cost him $10,000.
Alternatively, by investing in solar panels, he would earn
a state tax credit worth $8,500 (qualifying for it by promising
to yield 3,200-kWh annual output). The sum total of avoided
costs gave Coffin, as he recalls, ample reason to "go for
it."
Sited on a hillside, the spacious home included, Coffin says,
"lots of windows" for enjoying the area's panoramic natural
views, but which multiply the challenge and cost of staying
warm during the cold, dark days of December.
Load-wise, Coffin purchased low-energy lamps and applied
good insulation, but he still runs all the usual household
appliances, and even installed a wattage-intensive electric
oven in a dual-fuel (gas top) range.
To power it all, he devised a system combining solar PV,
solar hot water, and one of the first US applications of an
ecopower unit, configured for about 2 kW. From this mix-and-match
systemwhich has now completed its first autumn, winter,
and spring of operationhe's getting the benefit of clean,
renewable energy, yet without sacrificing the flexibility
and security afforded by propane-fueled cogeneration. Coffin
describes the assorted energy-production components and their
integration, as follows:
Solar PV
Coffin purchased 16 Kyocera solar PV panels for a 14-foot
by 16-foot ground-mounted array. Keeping them pointed at the
sun's arc improves the output by at least 15%, so he also
added two motorized axis trackers. Each panel produces on
the order of 130 W or better (sunlight conditions permitting),
making the measured total yield somewhere between 2.3 kW and
2.5 kW. This goes into sixteen L16 storage batteries, which
yield a total of roughly 700 amp hrs of capacity at 48 V.
It's approaching self-sufficiency. "However," Coffin admits,
"I did cheat a bit." He opted to lay down a 10-gauged copper
wire as a drop line running 1,600 feet to his old home, which
happens to sit on the adjacent lot (and is occupied by accommodating
new neighbors). This line provides him plus-or-minus 400 W
at 110 V, with a 4% voltage drop. It's not really critical
or absolutely needed, he points out. However, it does serve
as a nice battery extender, i.e., making them last longer
because of reduced cycling, and also providing some emergency
power backup, if ever needed.
After a year on the job, the solar energy system with battery
storage, "really works quite well," he says, and it hasn't
required much support.
Solar Hot Water Collection
To gather free heat from the sun as well, Coffin installed
seven 4-foot by 8-foot solar heat collectors on a south-facing
roof. During summertime these help warm the domestic hot water.
Later in the season he redirects the water flow down into
the home's well-insulated foundation via radiant floor tubing
he installed 1 to 3 feet under the floor insulation. This
warms much of the rock-fill below, making for a kind of heat
storage bunker. "There's a good month-or-so-worth of heat
stored in the rock under the basement," he says, providing
a kind of "blanket" effect and zero heat-loss as the weather
begins to cool. The warm rock under the house also minimizes
humidity and dampness.
As the weather gets cooler in early October, the solar-heated
water is directed into the normal 2-inch-deep radiant-floor
heating system for maximum solar heating output
Switch On the Ecopower
Starting in late October, Wisconsin's climate turns "really
bleak," Coffin says. For 8 or 10 weeks the sun pretty much
goes away. What to do?
Coffin went shopping for a generator that would work long
hours, be water cooled, and that promised good heat recovery.
He looked hard but found, he says, "not a lot on the market."
At a power show in Milwaukee he discovered the ecopower, and
thought the size, features, price, and engineering all fit
the bill nicely. "I didn't need a huge amount of output,"
he explains. The ecopower was also designed to be remotely
controlled, which meant that his solar PV could share the
same inverter, "so it was a pretty good fit." Coffin talked
to Cocking and volunteered as a beta test site.
Installation in a corner of his basement was largely done
by Coffin himself, and coupling the ecopower is designed to
be easily handled by any licensed electrician. In Coffin's
case there was already a grid-connected solar system, so a
DC-output ecopower unit was all that was needed as a supplement.
Marathon delivered a modified version called a "Powerblast
rack unit," which comes without the weather-proof outdoor
cabinet.
Almost immediately after installing it, Coffin recalls, "During
the cold-weather season when the heat was really needed, I
just switched it on and left it on," optimizing it to put
out all the heat it could. With its extremely efficient water-cooled
muffler and engine, the vast majority of heat was being recovered
and turned into hot water. "In terms of systems efficiency,
it is spectacular," he says admiringly. "It's real near 10%,"
he determined by noting its very tepid vented exhaust.
Captured heat goes into the same loop as the solar system
pipe described earliermaking for a timely substitution
during those gray days. Water temperature in the exhaust-heated
loop comes out at anywhere between 85°F and 120°F,
depending on pump volume (or speed) settings. This preheats
the domestic hot water. Well-insulated storage tanks ensure
that all the outflow is preserved.
Next, Coffin says, a regular hot water heater raises the
temp to 105°F as the "final finisher" (if needed), the
majority of the work having been done by the generator and/or
solar heat system.
Warm water surplus beyond this domestic need also goes into
the radiant floor and heats the house from the basement up.
Rising heat, Coffin says, "does a pretty good job of keeping
the house warm." Supplementing this on the upper floors are
wood stoves and a furnace. If the sun should happen to peek
out occasionally, "it still throws some extra heat into the
system too," he says.
Coffin sums up the tiny generator's role: "It's really a
good match for solar, because when the sun goes away I need
heat, and when the sun goes away I also need power."
Unaided solar PV suffices for just over half the year. Late
autumnbeing dark and unproductive of much solar amperageis
also a heavy load period. During the ecopower's five-month
maiden run from late 2004 into early 2005, it logged about
2,000 hours. At 2 kW per hour, he notes, "that's a lot of
electricity," equal to all the solar he generated for the
year.
Because he needs all of the little generator's cogen heatbut
not necessarily all of its powerthere were even times,
says Coffin, when he ran electric heaters as a "luxury," or
kept more house lights on, or used a separate electric heat
pump as a fresh-air ventilatorall "just to keep the
thing busy," so that he wouldn't risk overcharging the batteries.
Juggling Act
As previously noted, the solar PV input and ecopower share
a common inverter, which manages and balances the generation.
The DC ecopower output charges the 48-V battery bank, and
then is inverted into grid-synchronous, single-phase AC. In
fully automatic operation, the inverters can start and stop
the generator as needed and integrate the three resourcessolar
PV, the "cheat" line to the grid, and ecopower generatorthanks
to the latest-generation electronic features (from either
Trace or Outback equipment). Both brands offer programmable
controllers and the capability, says Coffin, of "keeping the
bottles in the air."
Menu-driven control systems handle specific rated grid inter-tie
inputs for the power structure, and do just about everything
else that is needed. "Basically," says Coffin, "without the
inverter being a pretty doggone versatile box, it wouldn't
work worth a darn." For example, the inverter box can pare
down the generator's output to what is required for battery
storage; whatever can't be stored must be expendedor
is exported to the next-door neighbor.
Power Export
This, too, is controllable. Coffin reports that for much of
the winter the ecopower was indeed sending a few watts to
the old property next door (via the above-described cheat
line). A meter kept track. At other timesi.e., on warm,
non-sunny days when the ecopower wasn't running because its
heat wasn't neededthe cheat line occasionally imported
power. Net outflow and inflow balanced to roughly equal (plus-or-minus
350 W or so, both ways) over the first year. Hence, the cheat-line
power wasn't and isn't truly needed, he explains, "but it
does stabilize the system on a day-by-day basis" and will
continue because it will help the batteries live longer. Import-export
levels can also be fine-tuned with the inverter electronics.
Permitting
As far as the utility company is concerned, the ecopower "doesn't
exist," says Coffin, in a sense because, from a grid interconnection
standpoint, the solar PV inverter "is the generator." "The
Marathon unit is kind of invisible to them because it merely
keeps the batteries more fully charged than the solar panels
alone, and it causes me to have more surplus power to export."
Thus, no additional permitting was needed. For grid safety,
there's a solar disconnect at the adjacent property (i.e.,
at the end of the cheat line) "and the utility can come and
turn me off whenever they want," he says.
Fueling
Becoming more popular than heating oil thereabouts, propane,
he says, is "a nice, clean fuel" which he stores in a 500-gallon
tank provided by a local co-op. In year one of his ecopower
deployment, Coffin expended 800 gallons at $1.10 per gallonessentially
the same as he used for fueling a conventional furnace before.
An ecopower can run on either propane or natural gas (not
always locally available in the boonies); and PowerPlus GmbH
reports they're working on a new version that can run on digester
methane.
Lastly, as a basis for comparison with Coffin's somewhat
exceptional application, Cocking notes that the heat generated
from one ecopower can heat his 2,700-square-foot home in southern
Wisconsin. When the cold weather arrives this year, Cocking
will rely on an ecopower to yield roughly the same heat his
furnace did. "I'm taking the number of therms that I used
last year and comparing it to the number of therms that this
unit could manufacture," he says, "so I can heat my house."
In summing-up, Cocking underscores what this "glorified water
heater" represents. "It's truly a home appliance. It is compact,
streamlined, neat, and it looks good. It's designed to fit
in a utility room, basement, or garage, depending on the homeowner's
preferred application. When properly installed, it is as quiet
as a refrigerator, and runs at the same decibel level…
It has very user-friendly controls and a computer interface,"
he says, noting that it can be remotely monitored. In fact
even a utility substation can communicate with it via a phone
link, as part of its built-in capability.
"And oh, by the way," he adds. "You get electricity as a
side benefit."
La Mesa, CAbased writer DAVID ENGLE specializes
in construction-related topics.
DE - September/October
2005
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